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Glasgow Herald

FINE ART EXHIBITION IN LONDON

... Prussian army over all others, we are insensibly led by 31. -de Neuville to feel that they were able to take as much pleasure in their bloody work as the soldiers of less educated nations. Close by this picture is a chariming figure of an old woman saying ...

THE ZULU WAR

... can move the army, and the army can only protect its own movements, there can then be doubt as to the successful result. Natal is said be the garden Africa and the most fertile country the world, and one is led to imagine that army might readily ...

A NEW FRENCH DRAMA—THE JACOBITES

... gladly thrown open for its reception, In the opening act of The Jacobites Charles Edward, the young Pretender, has just landed on the shores of Scotland to find his country- jmen, with the tragic ending of the 1715 Rebellion still fresh in their memories ...

THE OCTOBER MAGAZINE

... Lieutenant fo Hughes, of the United States Navy, as to naval hi warfare, and by Lieutenant Mtills, of the United ec States Army, as to land warfare. Both m articles are instructive, and are freelv illuse- m trated. A notable paper is devoted to an of account ...

ENTERTAINMENTS

... involved with a gang of forgers, and, instigated by their leader, who had been at one time an officer in the army, he attempts to discrd the woman whom he sup- poses to be no wife. But he is foiled by Tress, the daughter of the million, a gipsy fortune-teller ...

NEW BOOKS OF THE WEEK

... they had sunk, or had been ,blown up, or had grown disgusted and gone back homes. But for all that our army's greatest invasion of a foreign land was com- pletely successful, and the author draws the eminently pious inference that the success was chiefly ...

CONCERT IN [ill] OF THE GARIBALDI ITALIAN FUND

... subscribing for Gee. City Eall ' to aid the fuad at preo. ' hirn fibting for the Ga ribaldi, and the. brave men nrot- witu. - land TheII civil and religious freedom of their natil ' audience was very large, the hall being almost goampletely thued;* and ...

LITERATURE

... RATT-TRE. Tits CLEVER WOMAN OF THEt FAMITY. By the Author of The H.tir of Redclyffe. 2 Vols. London and Cambridge: Macmillan & Co. 1865. Turan is no need to rehearse here a story which all well-regulated mothers and daughters in the land must already possess ...

THE APRIL MAGAZINES

... by no means neglects the legiti- mate des.ires of the aeek. Thus not only does Miss Annie S. Swan terl her story of isMat- land of Laurieston, noda~ Silas K. Hocking. his shout Ned Rayrior, Aritbut also Canoon Talbot ex pounds , thle real romance of ...

LITERATURE

... the philogynist, or woman lover, who ventures under the fancied protection of that coaxing Greek word to promulgate these alarming views. When he has relieved hixself of them, he turns round lfercely on the misogynists, or woman haters, and asks ? ...

LITERARY NOTES

... and the Irish question in its manifold phases, from the days of O'Connell to those of Paruell, it dwells especially on the Land League and National movements of 1879 and 1894, and it contains the author's views on reforms which he thinkspossible and desirable ...

OLD GLASGOW EXHIBITION

... The portrait has now been rseen by us all, and behold the half was not told us. It is the face of a very, very beauti- ful woman-features, eyes, complexion, expres- sion-and the unknown artist has not thrown away his rare opportunity. It is well that even ...